Originally posted by Fiver
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Robert Paul
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Cross and Paul walked up Buck's row hand in hand when they encountered Polly Nichols body?
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Oh! BTW, not only did I concede early this Summer that Lechmere showing up in the courtroom in his work clothes was no longer a valid issue, as expressed in the East London Observer, I went out and proved as to why that is. That was the job of the anti-Lechmere crowd, and now they are giving me no quarters and have declared that I have now gone to the dark side .... oh no!
Really, i'm far more objective than someone, say, like Herlock ... who is so ideologically wrapped up in his biases, and so incapable of countering points, that its almost funny, but certainly a demonstration where people can go in that matter if they are not careful.Last edited by Newbie; 09-20-2025, 11:11 PM.
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A 50 yard distance would have put Charles Cross around the corner and out of sight until Robert Paul entered Bucks Row. We don't know what distance Paul saw Cross, nor can we know when he first heard Cross - no one asked Paul those questions.Originally posted by Newbie View Postthe only important thing about the Lloyd's article and his inquest testimony is Paul's consistent failure to mention seeing or hearing Lech,
who claimed to be only some 50 yards ahead of him, until noticing him stopped, standing near the body.
Paul not mentioning something is not evidence that it didn't exist. It's like concluding that since Paul never mentioned Cross' clothing, Cross must have been naked.
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You then mean, but don't say, that the evidence points to him being 40 - 50 yards in front of Paul marching along Bath Street and then up Buck's row ... correct? It's kind of important, because if Paul notices Lechmere earlier then the body, it would exonerate Lech .... and the Cross issue would fade away.
What evidence do you have? I hope it is not exclusively based on only part of Lechmere's testimony, editing out one or two important items mentioned by Lech. I hope that you are not merely satisfied with Lechmere telling you that he was just ahead of Paul and that you dropped everything else from consideration; that you are rigorous and analytical in your judgement, even handedly considering all the facts on the issue that we do have.
Well, here are the facts that we have. I ignored Lechmere's stated time of departing home as not a fact we can use, nor the just happening to conveniently hear Paul when moving towards the body item, because the killer would have also constructed such a story.
So, here they are: which ones do you wish to embrace or dispute?
A. parts of Lechmere's testimony:
- first noticing Paul's footsteps only while moving towards Polly Nichol's body - Staight in with a misunderstanding of what Cross actually said. Good start. What he said was: “ He walked into the middle of the road, and saw that it was the figure of a woman. He then heard the footsteps of a man going up Buck's-row, about forty yards away, in the direction that he himself had come from.“
He saw the figure when he had arrived at the middle of the road.
- not hearing anyone else all the way up Buck's row, when he first enters the street - The murder occurred on the Friday morning, Cross testified on the Monday so we have to at least allow for the memory of trivial things that he wasn’t listening for in the first place. And how do you know how good Cross’s hearing was?
B. parts of Paul's testimony and witness statement to Lloyd's: failing to mention, on two separate occasions, marking the presence of Lechmere along Bath Street or Buck's row, before finally visualizing him at various points next to Polly Nichol's body. - Because he hadn’t seen or noticed him. Nothing mysterious.
C. PC Neil's testimony to hearing PC Mizen's footsteps, some 120 yards away on Brady street - How loud was Mizen’s tread compared to Paul’s? How good was Neill’s hearing compared to Cross’s? Cross wasn’t looking or listening for anyone; Neill was on alert due to the situation, knowing that he required assistance.
D. Paul's statement that people seldom walk up Buck's row (at that time) without being on their guard - Irrelevant.
E. Current scientific findings on how the brain cancels out repetitive stimuli, most particularly, in the action of movement, where the motor cortex signals the inhibitory neurons of the auditory cortex to ignore repetitive sounds associated with walking or running. - I’m unaware of these current ‘findings.’
F. The theory of sound masking: which has applications to jack hammers, but not a person's own footsteps. - So it’s somehow impossible not to notice a sound? Rubbish.
We have 5 facts and our current scientific understanding of the neurology of hearing on this matter: the theory of sound masking being a pseudo theory in this case.
Which do you wish to dispute? All of it.
The evidence, in conjunction with science, says that Paul would have heard or seen Lechmere well before the body, no it doesn’t and that Lechmere would have heard Paul, if they were separated by a distance well, well short of that between PCs Neil and Mizen. When someone claims to be somewhere, but people at that location neither see or hear him, but they should have, that means that person was still there - correct?
You do realize that the notion that 'if guilty, he would have fled' is taking a premise and speculating about human behaviour to create a fact. No, it’s the application of common sense and the realisation that no serial killer in the entire history of serial killing ever stood around and waited for a stranger to turn up.
And I'm sure you don't want the triumph of speculation over fact. Good heavens, no! A thousand times, no! Absolutely not. That’s why the totally trumped up and dishonest case against Cross has been shown for the complete fabrication that it is,
If more facts are forthcoming, we can change our minds of course .... but we should be bound by facts here, and only facts
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Well, I guess this is the best you can do .... sort of .... your typical sad effort Herlock.
You plead ignorance to the science of acoustic psychology, and imply that it bores you .... as if this extinguishes its role in the discussion.
And then you warmly embrace the sound masking quality of human feet ..... zounds! Is discussion really that dreadful here?
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's estate should ask you for the name back.
Its a waste of time telling you that the human brain does not multi-task on perceptions well (the old acoustic psychology bit that bores you), so by focusing visually on the body, Neil was less likely to hear Mizens footsteps, not more likely. Lechmere would be in the same boat .... he finally claims to hear footsteps when he was visually focused.
He doesn't hear it while walking up the street, but just so happens to hear it when he was proximate to the body. Was Polly Nichol's body a sound receptor Herlock? Was that why PC Mizen also heard footsteps so well, or was he actually part rabbit?
One could say that Paul noticed footsteps all along ... but just didn't feel inclined to introduce them into his testimony. That would be a sound argument - but it was beyond you here. He'd most probably be wrong, but there is that scintilla of doubt. But then Lechmere comes along and tells you the same damn thing, with no room for doubt. Lechmere could hear Paul from that distance of separation, but just doesn't for some reason. Hell, Lech claimed that he could hear all the way up the street.
So, what are you trying to say when insisting that they just couldn't hear each other in that dark, dangerous street, separated by about a third the distance that separated the two PCs, when Lechmere then comes along and tells us that indeed he could? They should have been walking faster than Mizen, who was carrying a lamp and walking his beat; by walking faster, their feet should have hit the pavement harder. The boots they wore should have been sturdy enough to protect a toe from being broken, if they dropped a heavy load on it.
Lech didn't hear him, didn't hear him, didn't hear him .... and then, oops! Hears him when near the body. How convenient!
Why did he suddenly hear Paul's footstpes then Herlock, and not beforehand, when he was not visually focused? Oh! I'm sorry, you don't recognize the science of acoustic psychology here .... my bad. Well then, was it the acoustic receptor qualities of Polly Nichol's body redirecting the echo of footsteps to people on her immediate right?
Yes, that argument certainly is sustainable.
As to whether Lechmere first stopped, or was moving towards the body when he heard Paul, he never mentions stopping.
It would be pretty weird to stop there, you must admit .... but then, its just typical Lechmere weirdness, which is no proof of nothing!Last edited by Newbie; 09-20-2025, 11:23 PM.
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I’ve always assumed, and no one has ever given me any reason not to, that no one who favours Cross as a suspect believes that he would have met her elsewhere and then taken her to a spot that was on his direct walk to work; and certainly not at a time so close to his being due at work. If Cross had gone out early to find a victim is it really likely that in Whitechapel, he had failed to find a prostitute? This would have been about as likely as someone going to Paris and failing to find a shop that sells baguettes. The alternative then is that Cross saw her on his way to work and decided to kill her on the spot; careless of the location and not bothering to suggest that they go a street or two away to a street where he couldn’t have been connected to.
Emily Holland had met Polly Nichols at the junction of Osborne Street and Whitechapel Road at around 2.30am on the morning of August 31st. I’m not great with maps but it appears to me that this would have been a walk of around 12-15 minutes (I’ll stand correcting of course) Polly was the worse for drink and stated her need for cash to get a bed.
Would she have tried unsuccessfully for a customer elsewhere, given up and decided that the backstreet that was Buck’s Row was a better option? It seems unlikely to say the least. Why would a prostitute choose Buck’s Row?
And would she have gone straight from her meeting with Holland to Buck’s Row? Again, surely it’s unlikely as this would have got her there by around 2.45 and PC Neill hadn’t seen her when he passed on his beat 30 minutes later.
So the only remaining, and far more likely explanation, is that she ran into her killer not far from Buck’s Row and she had taken him to a quiet backstreet where she thought that they would be unlikely to be disturbed. Surely no one can really imagine Cross doing this?
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That’s some in-depth, deep-dive research that you’ve done to dig out that post Lewis.Originally posted by Lewis C View Post
OK, I'll refer you to a place in Casebook that's easy to find: post #63 of this page.
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OK, I'll refer you to a place in Casebook that's easy to find: post #63 of this page.Originally posted by Newbie View Post
I'm perfectly happy to hear how the 25 second time gap is tenable. In fact, I beg people here to tell me why its tenable.
Its always beneath people to come up with their reasoning .... or, they refer me to some vague place in Casebook, that I need to search out.
I'm ready for it Dusty - hit me!
Someone here was talking about sound masking involving Lechmere or Paul's footsteps, which I patiently explained was not a valid scientific theory in application to footsteps.
Someone (the same person?) spoke about the footsteps being heard on the unconscious but not conscious level, and when I challenged him to come up with a study, he demurred.
So, those two are none starters for me, and should be for anyone here who are seriously interested in the issue.
I'm ready!
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It’s late and I just haven’t got the inclination to search through various newspaper reports of the inquest. I’ve done the obvious and checked The Times and The Telegraph but perhaps someone could point me to where Cross or Paul had been asked if they had heard the other man prior to their meeting in Buck’s Row?
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Excellent point John. Christer Holmgren invented The Mizen Scam which, according to the facts, Cross must have concocted as soon as he first heard Paul approach and on the spot in a feat of almost Rain Man-type quick thinking. And yet, he never thought to say that he’d seen or heard someone up ahead near the body who ran away. Added to that, even though he had over two days thinking time, he didn’t think to firm up his leaving the house time. Why didn’t he say “I left home at around or just after 3.35.” Was that too ‘ingenius’ for the creator of The Mizen Scam?Originally posted by JohnSAJR View PostWe can debate timings, who was where or what was heard, but don't forget Cross, the alleged murdering mastermind, had three different opportunities to say he'd heard running or declining footsteps as he approached Nichols - to Paul, Mizen and at the inquest. He had three days to concoct a simple cover story, before appearing at that inquest, but what does he do? He stands up and indirectly implicates himself. This is the biggest indicator of his innocence.
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We can debate timings, who was where or what was heard, but don't forget Cross, the alleged murdering mastermind, had three different opportunities to say he'd heard running or declining footsteps as he approached Nichols - to Paul, Mizen and at the inquest. He had three days to concoct a simple cover story, before appearing at that inquest, but what does he do? He stands up and indirectly implicates himself. This is the biggest indicator of his innocence.
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There’s no point in telling you. You are clearly now one of the ‘select.’ A Disciple of the Church of the True Charles Cross.Originally posted by Newbie View Post
I'm perfectly happy to hear how the 25 second time gap is tenable. In fact, I beg people here to tell me why its tenable.
Its always beneath people to come up with their reasoning .... or, they refer me to some vague place in Casebook, that I need to search out.
I'm ready for it Dusty - hit me!
Someone here was talking about sound masking involving Lechmere or Paul's footsteps, which I patiently explained was not a valid scientific theory in application to footsteps.
Someone (the same person?) spoke about the footsteps being heard on the unconscious but not conscious level, and when I challenged him to come up with a study, he demurred.
So, those two are none starters for me, and should be for anyone here who are seriously interested in the issue.
I'm ready!
Thankfully most of us in this subject haven’t been duped by this drivel.
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And the facts tell us that Cross was innocent. Honesty tells us this. The ‘case’ against him continues to be a complete stain on the subject as a whole.Originally posted by Newbie View Post
You then mean, but don't say, that the evidence points to him being 40 - 50 yards in front of Paul marching along Bath Street and then up Buck's row ... correct? It's kind of important, because if Paul notices Lechmere earlier then the body, it would exonerate Lech .... and the Cross issue would fade away.
What evidence do you have? I hope it is not exclusively based on only part of Lechmere's testimony, editing out one or two important items mentioned by Lech. I hope that you are not merely satisfied with Lechmere telling you that he was just ahead of Paul and that you dropped everything else from consideration; that you are rigorous and analytical in your judgement, even handedly considering all the facts on the issue that we do have.
Well, here are the facts that we have. I ignored Lechmere's stated time of departing home as not a fact we can use, nor the just happening to conveniently hear Paul when moving towards the body item, because the killer would have also constructed such a story.
So, here they are: which ones do you wish to embrace or dispute?
A. parts of Lechmere's testimony:
- first noticing Paul's footsteps only while moving towards Polly Nichol's body - Staight in with a misunderstanding of what Cross actually said. Good start. What he said was: “ He walked into the middle of the road, and saw that it was the figure of a woman. He then heard the footsteps of a man going up Buck's-row, about forty yards away, in the direction that he himself had come from.“
He saw the figure when he had arrived at the middle of the road.
- not hearing anyone else all the way up Buck's row, when he first enters the street - The murder occurred on the Friday morning, Cross testified on the Monday so we have to at least allow for the memory of trivial things that he wasn’t listening for in the first place. And how do you know how good Cross’s hearing was?
B. parts of Paul's testimony and witness statement to Lloyd's: failing to mention, on two separate occasions, marking the presence of Lechmere along Bath Street or Buck's row, before finally visualizing him at various points next to Polly Nichol's body. - Because he hadn’t seen or noticed him. Nothing mysterious.
C. PC Neil's testimony to hearing PC Mizen's footsteps, some 120 yards away on Brady street - How loud was Mizen’s tread compared to Paul’s? How good was Neill’s hearing compared to Cross’s? Cross wasn’t looking or listening for anyone; Neill was on alert due to the situation, knowing that he required assistance.
D. Paul's statement that people seldom walk up Buck's row (at that time) without being on their guard - Irrelevant.
E. Current scientific findings on how the brain cancels out repetitive stimuli, most particularly, in the action of movement, where the motor cortex signals the inhibitory neurons of the auditory cortex to ignore repetitive sounds associated with walking or running. - I’m unaware of these current ‘findings.’
F. The theory of sound masking: which has applications to jack hammers, but not a person's own footsteps. - So it’s somehow impossible not to notice a sound? Rubbish.
We have 5 facts and our current scientific understanding of the neurology of hearing on this matter: the theory of sound masking being a pseudo theory in this case.
Which do you wish to dispute? All of it.
The evidence, in conjunction with science, says that Paul would have heard or seen Lechmere well before the body, no it doesn’t and that Lechmere would have heard Paul, if they were separated by a distance well, well short of that between PCs Neil and Mizen. When someone claims to be somewhere, but people at that location neither see or hear him, but they should have, that means that person was still there - correct?
You do realize that the notion that 'if guilty, he would have fled' is taking a premise and speculating about human behaviour to create a fact. No, it’s the application of common sense and the realisation that no serial killer in the entire history of serial killing ever stood around and waited for a stranger to turn up.
And I'm sure you don't want the triumph of speculation over fact. Good heavens, no! A thousand times, no! Absolutely not. That’s why the totally trumped up and dishonest case against Cross has been shown for the complete fabrication that it is,
If more facts are forthcoming, we can change our minds of course .... but we should be bound by facts here, and only facts
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I'm perfectly happy to hear how the 25 second time gap is tenable. In fact, I beg people here to tell me why its tenable.Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post"Based on the evidence, the 25 second time gap is untenable"
How many times over the years, both here and elsewhere, has it been explained that it is perfectly tenable and the reasons why?
Yet, people still will not acknowledge there is an alternative that fits the evidence.
Its always beneath people to come up with their reasoning .... or, they refer me to some vague place in Casebook, that I need to search out.
I'm ready for it Dusty - hit me!
Someone here was talking about sound masking involving Lechmere or Paul's footsteps, which I patiently explained was not a valid scientific theory in application to footsteps.
Someone (the same person?) spoke about the footsteps being heard on the unconscious but not conscious level, and when I challenged him to come up with a study, he demurred.
So, those two are none starters for me, and should be for anyone here who are seriously interested in the issue.
I'm ready!Last edited by Newbie; 09-20-2025, 08:38 PM.
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You then mean, but don't say, that the evidence points to him being 40 - 50 yards in front of Paul marching along Bath Street and then up Buck's row ... correct? It's kind of important, because if Paul notices Lechmere earlier then the body, it would exonerate Lech .... and the Cross issue would fade away.Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostWhat the evidence points to is that Cross was entirely honest as to what he said about what happened that morning. People that weren’t there speak with undeserved confidence as if they were. Not one single thing about what Cross said raises an eyebrow. The case ‘against’ him is a quite deliberate fabrication. Deliberate misinterpretation, invention, assumption, evidence editing, opinion stated as fact, lying and out and out silliness. The most disreputable position to hold in this case is to say that you think Cross might have been the ripper. It can’t be stated genuinely.
What evidence do you have? I hope it is not exclusively based on only part of Lechmere's testimony, editing out one or two important items mentioned by Lech. I hope that you are not merely satisfied with Lechmere telling you that he was just ahead of Paul and that you dropped everything else from consideration; that you are rigorous and analytical in your judgement, even handedly considering all the facts on the issue that we do have.
Well, here are the facts that we have. I ignored Lechmere's stated time of departing home as not a fact we can use, nor the just happening to conveniently hear Paul when moving towards the body item, because the killer would have also constructed such a story.
So, here they are: which ones do you wish to embrace or dispute?
A. parts of Lechmere's testimony:
- first noticing Paul's footsteps only while moving towards Polly Nichol's body
- not hearing anyone else all the way up Buck's row, when he first enters the street
B. parts of Paul's testimony and witness statement to Lloyd's: failing to mention, on two separate occasions, marking the presence of Lechmere along Bath Street or Buck's row, before finally visualizing him at various points next to Polly Nichol's body.
C. PC Neil's testimony to hearing PC Mizen's footsteps, some 120 yards away on Brady street
D. Paul's statement that people seldom walk up Buck's row (at that time) without being on their guard
E. Current scientific findings on how the brain cancels out repetitive stimuli, most particularly, in the action of movement, where the motor cortex signals the inhibitory neurons of the auditory cortex to ignore repetitive sounds associated with walking or running.
F. The theory of sound masking: which has applications to jack hammers, but not a person's own footsteps.
We have 5 facts and our current scientific understanding of the neurology of hearing on this matter: the theory of sound masking being a pseudo theory in this case.
Which do you wish to dispute?
The evidence, in conjunction with science, says that Paul would have heard or seen Lechmere well before the body, and that Lechmere would have heard Paul, if they were separated by a distance well, well short of that between PCs Neil and Mizen. When someone claims to be somewhere, but people at that location neither see or hear him, but they should have, that means that person was still there - correct?
You do realize that the notion that 'if guilty, he would have fled' is taking a premise and speculating about human behavior to create a fact.
And I'm sure you don't want the triumph of speculation over fact. Good heavens, no! A thousand times, no!
If more facts are forthcoming, we can change our minds of course .... but we should be bound by facts here, and only facts
Last edited by Newbie; 09-20-2025, 08:25 PM.
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